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Exploring the Proteomic Profile of Soybean Bran: Unlocking the Potential for Improving Protein Quality and Quantity

Soybean is a rich source of vegetal protein for both animal and human consumption. Despite the high levels of protein in soybean seeds, industrial processing to obtain soybean bran significantly decreases the final protein content of the byproducts. To overcome this problem, cultivars with higher pr...

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Autores principales: Molinari, Mayla Daiane Corre, Fuganti-Pagliarini, Renata, Yu, Yanbao, Florentino, Lilian Hasegawa, Mertz-Henning, Liliane Marcia, Lima, Rayane Nunes, Bittencourt, Daniela Matias de Carvalho, Freire, Marcelo Oliveira, Rech, Elibio
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10383420/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37514318
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants12142704
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author Molinari, Mayla Daiane Corre
Fuganti-Pagliarini, Renata
Yu, Yanbao
Florentino, Lilian Hasegawa
Mertz-Henning, Liliane Marcia
Lima, Rayane Nunes
Bittencourt, Daniela Matias de Carvalho
Freire, Marcelo Oliveira
Rech, Elibio
author_facet Molinari, Mayla Daiane Corre
Fuganti-Pagliarini, Renata
Yu, Yanbao
Florentino, Lilian Hasegawa
Mertz-Henning, Liliane Marcia
Lima, Rayane Nunes
Bittencourt, Daniela Matias de Carvalho
Freire, Marcelo Oliveira
Rech, Elibio
author_sort Molinari, Mayla Daiane Corre
collection PubMed
description Soybean is a rich source of vegetal protein for both animal and human consumption. Despite the high levels of protein in soybean seeds, industrial processing to obtain soybean bran significantly decreases the final protein content of the byproducts. To overcome this problem, cultivars with higher protein contents must be developed. However, selecting the target proteins is difficult because of the lack of information on the proteome profile of soybean bran. Therefore, this study obtained the comparative proteomic profiles of both natural coatless seeds and defatted bran from an elite tropical-soybean cultivar. Thus, their extracts were characterized using LC–MS/MS and a total of 550 proteins were identified. Among these, 526 proteins were detected in coatless seeds and 319 proteins in defatted bran. Moreover, a total of 139 proteins were identified as presenting different levels of content in coatless seeds and defatted bran. Among them, only 46 were retained after the seed processing. These proteins were clustered in several important metabolic pathways, such as amino-acid biosynthesis, sugar biosynthesis, and antioxidant activity, meaning that they could act as targets for bioactive products or genome editing to improve protein quality and quantity in soybean grains. These findings can enhance our understanding regarding protein robustness for both soybean crops and the commercial bran improvement because target proteins must remain intact after processing and must be bioactive when overexpressed. Overall, the soybean bran proteomic profile was explored for the first time, providing a valuable catalogue of target proteins that can tolerate the industrial process.
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spelling pubmed-103834202023-07-30 Exploring the Proteomic Profile of Soybean Bran: Unlocking the Potential for Improving Protein Quality and Quantity Molinari, Mayla Daiane Corre Fuganti-Pagliarini, Renata Yu, Yanbao Florentino, Lilian Hasegawa Mertz-Henning, Liliane Marcia Lima, Rayane Nunes Bittencourt, Daniela Matias de Carvalho Freire, Marcelo Oliveira Rech, Elibio Plants (Basel) Article Soybean is a rich source of vegetal protein for both animal and human consumption. Despite the high levels of protein in soybean seeds, industrial processing to obtain soybean bran significantly decreases the final protein content of the byproducts. To overcome this problem, cultivars with higher protein contents must be developed. However, selecting the target proteins is difficult because of the lack of information on the proteome profile of soybean bran. Therefore, this study obtained the comparative proteomic profiles of both natural coatless seeds and defatted bran from an elite tropical-soybean cultivar. Thus, their extracts were characterized using LC–MS/MS and a total of 550 proteins were identified. Among these, 526 proteins were detected in coatless seeds and 319 proteins in defatted bran. Moreover, a total of 139 proteins were identified as presenting different levels of content in coatless seeds and defatted bran. Among them, only 46 were retained after the seed processing. These proteins were clustered in several important metabolic pathways, such as amino-acid biosynthesis, sugar biosynthesis, and antioxidant activity, meaning that they could act as targets for bioactive products or genome editing to improve protein quality and quantity in soybean grains. These findings can enhance our understanding regarding protein robustness for both soybean crops and the commercial bran improvement because target proteins must remain intact after processing and must be bioactive when overexpressed. Overall, the soybean bran proteomic profile was explored for the first time, providing a valuable catalogue of target proteins that can tolerate the industrial process. MDPI 2023-07-20 /pmc/articles/PMC10383420/ /pubmed/37514318 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants12142704 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Molinari, Mayla Daiane Corre
Fuganti-Pagliarini, Renata
Yu, Yanbao
Florentino, Lilian Hasegawa
Mertz-Henning, Liliane Marcia
Lima, Rayane Nunes
Bittencourt, Daniela Matias de Carvalho
Freire, Marcelo Oliveira
Rech, Elibio
Exploring the Proteomic Profile of Soybean Bran: Unlocking the Potential for Improving Protein Quality and Quantity
title Exploring the Proteomic Profile of Soybean Bran: Unlocking the Potential for Improving Protein Quality and Quantity
title_full Exploring the Proteomic Profile of Soybean Bran: Unlocking the Potential for Improving Protein Quality and Quantity
title_fullStr Exploring the Proteomic Profile of Soybean Bran: Unlocking the Potential for Improving Protein Quality and Quantity
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the Proteomic Profile of Soybean Bran: Unlocking the Potential for Improving Protein Quality and Quantity
title_short Exploring the Proteomic Profile of Soybean Bran: Unlocking the Potential for Improving Protein Quality and Quantity
title_sort exploring the proteomic profile of soybean bran: unlocking the potential for improving protein quality and quantity
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10383420/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37514318
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants12142704
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